Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The author examined a group of 143 patients with osteomalacia of different origin before treatment and after adequate treatment with vitamin D, using laboratory tests, assessment of body weight and muscular strength (grip of the dominant hand). After treatment there was a significant rise of calcaemia, phosphataemia and calciuria and a drop of alkaline phosphatase activity. The body weight increased within the first month of treatment on average by 1.27 kg, during the second month by another 1.15 kg. The patients gained a total of 2.42 kg. The muscular strength increased during the first month on average by 3.23 kg and during the second month by another 2.16 kg, i.e. a total of 5.39 kg. From these results it may be concluded that vitamin D may have a certain anabolic effect if used in pharmacological does either due to an increased nutrient absorption from the gut because of hypertrophy of the intestinal wall or indirectly via hypercalcaemia which increases the hydrochloric acid secretion in the stomach as well as pepsin secretion, and promotes activation of trypsin and lipase in the duodenum and moreover causes retardation of the intestinal transit. The increased muscular strength in due to a rise of calcaemia, improved muscle contraction and probably also due to the mentioned nutritional factors. There may be also the factor of an improved lifestyle due to the immunomodulating action of vitamin D and disappearance of bone pain.
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PMID:[Anabolic effects of vitamin D in patients with osteomalacia]. 263 59

Proteolytic modification of the native alkaline phosphatase dimer is restricted to sites in the amino-terminal portion of the sequence. Complementing previous studies of the product of trypsin cleavage at the R-11, A-12 bond (Roberts, C. H., and Chlebowski, J. F. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 729-733; Roberts, C. H., and Chlebowski, J. F. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 7557-7561) circular dichroic spectroscopy indicates that cleavage at this site results in a rearrangement of secondary structure and change in tertiary structure as monitored in the far and near UV regions, respectively. Under more vigorous reaction conditions, trypsin cleaves at the R-35, D-36 bond. The deletion of an additional 24 residues yields a species whose functional and structural properties are similar to the initial product of trypsin cleavage. Treatment of the enzyme with Protease V-8 results in cleavage at the E-9, N-10 bond. In contrast to the products of trypsin treatment, this truncated enzyme is similar to the native enzyme. These results indicate that the residues at the N-10 and R-11 positions play a unique role in maintaining the structural integrity and catalytic potency of the enzyme although this locus is distant from the enzyme active centers. These observations are discussed in terms of the three-dimensional structure of the enzyme.
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PMID:Proteolytic modification of Escherichia coli alkaline phosphatase. 264 38

The eukaryotic serine protease, rat anionic trypsin, and various mutants created by site-directed mutagenesis have been heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. The bacterial alkaline phosphatase (phoA) promoter was used to control the expression of the enzymes in an induced or constitutive fashion. The DNA coding for the eukaryotic signal peptide of pretrypsinogen was replaced with DNA coding for the phoA signal peptide. The phoA signal peptide successfully directs the secretion of the mammalian trypsinogen to the periplasmic space of E. coli. Active trypsin was expressed in the periplasm of E. coli by deleting the DNA coding for the activation hexapeptide of the zymogen. The activity of trypsin in the periplasm suggests that the enzyme is correctly activated and has folded such that the 12 cysteine residues involved in the six disulfide bonds of rat anionic trypsin have paired correctly. A transcription terminator increased the level of expression by a factor of two. However, increasing the copy number of the plasmid decreased the levels of expression. Localization of the active enzyme in the periplasm allows rapid screening of modified trypsin activities and facilitates the purification of protein to homogeneity and subsequently to crystallinity.
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PMID:An expression system for trypsin. 265 64

We developed an improved immunohistochemical technique for distinguishing human mast cells of the MCT (tryptase-positive, chymase-negative) and MCTC (tryptase-positive, chymase-positive) types utilizing a biotinylated murine anti-chymase monoclonal antibody (MAb), termed B7, and an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated murine anti-tryptase MAb, termed G3. The B7 MAb also was used to show the selective presence of chymase in mast cells. The distribution of MCT and MCTC cells in Carnoy's fluid-fixed tissue sections of human lung, skin, small intestine, and tonsils was analyzed by the new technique and the results compared to those obtained with the older method using a rabbit polyclonal antichymase antibody and a mouse anti-tryptase MAb in indirect immunoperoxidase and indirect immunoalkaline phosphatase protocols, respectively. In tissues known to contain predominantly mature mast cells, there were no quantitative differences between the two techniques, although the staining intensity achieved with the anti-chymase MAb was greater and without development of high background, compared to results achieved with the polyclonal antibody. MCT cells were the predominant type seen in the alveoli of the lung (93%) and in the small intestinal mucosa (81%). MCTC cells predominanted in the skin (99%) and in the small intestinal submucosa (77%) and, to a lesser degree, in tonsils (60%). However, in newborn foreskin tissue which contains predominantly immature forms of mast cells, 75% of all mast cells were stained uniformly and intensely with B7, whereas only 43% were stained with the polyclonal anti-chymase antibody. Therefore, the use of MAb provides for better standardization of reagents and more accurate assessment of the distribution of human MCT and MCTC cells in tissues than previously available methods.
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PMID:Detection of MCT and MCTC types of human mast cells by immunohistochemistry using new monoclonal anti-tryptase and anti-chymase antibodies. 267 73

It has recently been shown that a monoclonal antibody SM 1-36-2 against connectin, an elastic filament of striated muscles, binds to the "elastic" domain of the molecule, and that the H subunit of neurofilament (NF-H), an intermediate filament of nerve cells, shares a homologous domain (Shimizu, T. et al. (1988) Biomed. Res. 9, 227-234 and Itoh, Y. et al. (1988) J. Biochem. 104, 504-508). In order to characterize (1) the intramolecular localization of the domain in the NF-H and (2) the effect of the phosphorylation state on the immunoreactivity, the homologous domain in the NF-H was analyzed by Western blotting after limited digestion with trypsin or alpha-chymotrypsin and dephosphorylation with E. coli alkaline phosphatase. It was found that (1) the epitope was located not in the core region but in the carboxyl-terminal peripheral (cross-bridge) region of NF-H and (2) the epitopes in connectin and NF-H were not affected by the phosphorylation state.
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PMID:The immunological homology between two filamentous cross-linker phosphoproteins, connectin and cross-bridge region of neurofilament-H, is not affected by the phosphorylation state. 272 66

Since they are found to be increased in lesions of acute necrotic ulcerative gingivitis or marginal periodontitis, agents for these diseases. In the present study, 38 pure cultured strains were obtained as a result of isolation and culture of samples collected from lesions of marginal periodontitis (periodontal pokets), and the biological and biochemical characteristics of these strains were investigated. 1) Light microscopy (including dark-field microscopy) and transmission electron microscopy (negative staining) were used for observation of the morphology and cellular structure of the strains. The cells had a spiral shape, and showed active movement. Based on the above findings the cultured strains were all confirmed to be spirochetes of small to medium size, being 0.08-0.24 micron in width. 2) Growth and motility of the strains were investigated on various types of culture medium. Intense growth and movement were noted in strains cultured in bovine liver exudate medium containing horse serum (pH 7.2) at 37 degrees C under anaerobic conditions produced by the evacuation-replacement method (95% N2, 5% CO2) for 3-7 days after inoculation. 3) Thirty-five strains were positive for indole production and decomposition of urea, mucin, hippuric acid and esculin. Production of hydrogen sulfied was observed in 31 strains. In decomposition tests for 17 carbohydrates, 17 strains were positive for galactose and 14 strains were positive for glucose, while 11 strains were positive for dextrin and 10 strains for fructose upon decomposition of soluble starch. Other carbohydrates were also decomposed by a few strains. 4) In an investigation of the production of alcohol and lower fatty acids, among the metabolic products detected by gas chromatography, a large amount of acetic acid and small amounts of ethanol, lactic acid, propionic acid, pyruvic acid were observed. 5) The results of enzyme activity tests using an API ZYM system indicated relatively high activities of esterase, esterase-lipase, alpha-glucosidase, alkaline phosphatase, trypsin and acid phosphatase.
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PMID:[Biological and biochemical characteristics of the oral spirochetes isolated from the focus of marginal periodontitis]. 276 48

Binding of two monoclonal anti-liposome antibodies to the surface of cultured murine peritoneal macrophages was investigated by indirect immunofluorescence and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Neither antibody bound to cultures of freshly explanted, nonadherent macrophages, but immunoreactivity was observed following cell adherence to tissue culture plastic. Fluorescent microscopic evaluation revealed heterogeneity in staining patterns of the antibodies on adherent cells. Binding both to viable and fixed adherent macrophages was observed even after a 10,000-fold dilution of antibody. Treatment of adherent macrophage cultures with trypsin increased antibody binding. Further treatment of trypsinized-macrophages with alkaline phosphatase or neuraminidase did not affect antibody binding, but phospholipase D and, to a greater extent, phospholipase C resulted in a marked decrease in cellular binding. The data indicate that antibodies produced against liposomes appear to bind to surface phospholipids of macrophages, but binding can be influenced by the physiological state of the macrophage and overlying cell surface proteins.
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PMID:Antibodies to phospholipids and liposomes: binding of antibodies to cells. 282 Apr 89

The regulatory site peptide sequence of phosphorylated inactive pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase from maize leaf tissue was determined by automated Edman degradation analysis of 32P-labeled peptides purified by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The overlapping phosphopeptides were products of a digestion of the [beta-32P]ADP-inactivated dikinase with either trypsin or Pronase E. The sequence is Thr-Glu-Arg-Gly-Gly-Met-Thr(P)-Ser-His-Ala-Ala-Val-Val-Ala-Arg. The phosphothreonine residue, which appeared as either an anomalous proline or an unidentifiable phenylthiohydantoin derivative during sequencing, was verified by two-dimensional phosphoamino acid analysis of the phosphopeptides and by resequencing the tryptic peptide after dephosphorylation with exogenous alkaline phosphatase. This sequence, starting at position 4, is completely homologous to the previously published sequence of the tryptic dodecapeptide harboring the catalytically essential (phospho)histidyl residue in the active-site domain of the dikinase from the nonphotosynthetic bacterium, Bacteroides symbiosus (Goss, N.H., Evans, C.T., and Wood, H.G. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5805-5809). These comparative results indicate that the regulatory phosphothreonine causing complete inactivation of maize leaf dikinase is separated from the critical active-site (phospho)histidine by just one intervening residue in the primary sequence.
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PMID:Sequence of the phosphothreonyl regulatory site peptide from inactive maize leaf pyruvate, orthophosphate dikinase. 283 85

Hybrid enzymes which have two different enzyme activities linked together covalently may be useful reagents for various applications, such as the determination of complex biological structures. The present paper describes the preparation and purification of two such enzyme-enzyme conjugates, namely, trypsin-chymotrypsin and trypsin-alkaline phosphatase. Whereas the former has been prepared by using the well-known bifunctional reagent glutaraldehyde, the latter exploited the Schiff base formation between the oxidized carbohydrate moiety of alkaline phosphatase and the free amino groups of trypsin.
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PMID:Preparation of heteroenzyme conjugates: trypsin-chymotrypsin and trypsin-alkaline phosphatase. 284 96

The FhuA protein (formerly TonA) is located in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli K12. Fusions between fhuA and phoA genes were constructed. They determined proteins containing a truncated but still active alkaline phosphatase of constant size and a variable FhuA portion which ranged from 11%-90% of the mature FhuA protein. The fusion sites were nearly randomly distributed along the FhuA protein. The FhuA segments directed the secretion of the truncated alkaline phosphatase across the cytoplasmic membrane. The fusion proteins were proteolytically degraded up to the size of alkaline phosphatase and no longer reacted with anti-FhuA antibodies. The fusion proteins were more stable in lon and pep mutants lacking cytoplasmic protease and peptidases, respectively. The larger fusion proteins above a molecular weight of 64,000 dalton were predominantly found in the outer membrane fraction. They were degraded by trypsin when cells were converted to spheroplasts so that trypsin gained access to the periplasm. In contrast, FhuA protein in the outer membrane was largely resistant to trypsin. It is concluded that the larger FhuA'-'PhoA fusion proteins were associated with, but not properly integrated into, the outer membrane.
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PMID:Probing FhuA'-'PhoA fusion proteins for the study of FhuA export into the cell envelope of Escherichia coli K12. 285 32


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